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Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

Breaking News for Dinosaur Fans!

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

It’s not very often I have time to report on breaking news at I Don’t Have Time For This, but here goes: A new – and tiny – species of dinosaur has been discovered. And guess what? You can go see it for yourself at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County!

unknownMuseum officials just released information about the Fruitadens haagarorum, which they’re calling the smallest dinosaur ever discovered from North America. This little critter weighed less than two pounds and topped out at just 28 inches in length (think very odd-looking and oversized lizard, pictured above). The bones were discovered in Colorado in the late 1970s and were studied by an international team of scientists, including Luis Chiappe, Ph.D., Natural History Museum Dinosaur Institute Director. Their findings were released today in the British science journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

“Fruitadens is the smallest known dinosaur from North America; it’s one of the smallest dinosaurs, period,” Chiappe said in a press release today. “It tells you once again how dinosaurs range in size, from animals that were barely two pounds in weight to animals that were tens of tons in weight. That knowledge opens the door to further research about their feeding strategies and diets.”

The Fruitadens populated the planet about 150 million years ago during the Late Jurassic period and was a speedy little critter that darted beneath the legs of its bigger bretheren. It possessed an unusual combination of different shaped teeth, suggesting it may have eaten both plants and animals (unlike most dinosaurs, which typically ate one or the other exclusively). It was named for the area of Fruita in Colorado, where the fossils were first discovered, and the Latin word for tooth. The second part of the name honors Paul Haaga, a NHM donor and Board of Trustees president.

You and your little fossil followers can go see the little Fruitadens at the museum’s popular Dino Lab, where you can peer at the bones under a microscope and watch Dinosaur Institute sculptor and preparator Doyle Trankina reconstruct five Fruitadens. The reconstructed Fruitadens will be moved to a permanent home next to the 68-foot-long Mamenchisaurus inside the new dinosaur hall when it opens in July 2011.

School For You

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

How’s the school year going? Here’s my report: 1235schoolbus300

• Kate, as a fourth grader, is now mostly on her own (with only a little nagging) when it comes to getting homework done. But somehow she always magically finds a way to milk a 20-minute “Report About Me” into a three-hour trip to the salt mines. Last night, she decided the 50-word assignment needed to be done in cursive. She doesn’t know cursive. I think next time she feels the need to jazz up assignments, I will suggest she use only her feet to write the report.

• Jack, a fresh-faced kindergartener, does not understand the concept of homework just yet. He never – ever, ever, ever – remembers to turn in his “yellow things glued to paper” assignment. Isn’t the teacher asking for it?, I plead. [insert blank stare here]

• Jack’s first day of school was actually a “mixer” of sorts. Parents hung around, chatted with the teacher, met Fred the bearded dragon and got to know each other. Before I set foot in his classroom, I had no knowledge that it was not a regular school day. How was it that I was the only one who didn’t get the memo? I sweated profusely throughout the morning until the 11 a.m. dismissal time (nope, didn’t know about that either).

Why am I regaling you with these tales? Because I am often the victim, like so many other parents of school-age kids, of information UNDER-load. This year, in an attempt to be “green,” the school is not bothering to send out notices, which I wouldn’t be getting anyway, apparently.

But I’m sure thousands of you have similar stories about lack of communication, school policy issues, funding questions and just straight-up confusion, which is often my problem. But parent involvement is often what transforms a “D” school into an “A” and keeps parents, like me, just a little more sane and kids a little more engaged. And those “A” schools need parents to continue to ask questions, get involved and be present in the classroom (or playground or library).

California State Senator Gloria Romero (District 24), Chair of the Senate Education Committee, is hoping to empower parents a bit when it comes to speaking up for our children’s education in these tough times, when programs are getting tossed out like Jack’s homework. To that end she’s also hosting a Power to the Parents town hall tonight from 6 p.m.-8:30 p.m. at the Rosemont Elementary School 421 N. Rosemont Ave., Los Angeles.

She also offers these tips on ways parents can get involved this school year (and good luck with the homework!):

  1. Go to Back to School night. Get to know your child’s teacher and keep in contact. Learning doesn’t stop when your child walks out of the classroom – reading at home and monitoring homework is especially important.
  2. Join parent groups. There are numerous parent groups at both the school and the district level. The school site council and parent-teacher organization advise the school administration, step up when changes need to made and sponsor various events and fundraisers throughout the year. Many districts also get input from parents through one or more parent advisory councils.
  3. Meet your school board. As parents, it’s not easy to get to evening meetings, but it can be worthwhile to go and meet the superintendent and elected officials who set policy for your district. You’ll need them on your side when they face tough budget decisions and your favorite program is on the line. Take your children along and the trip becomes a lesson in civic engagement.
  4. Volunteer in the classroom. It’s not only fun to dive in on finger-painting or drive kids on a field trip, it’s also important for your child. A number of studies have shown that students do better academically when their parents are involved in the school.
  5. Go to school events – it’s your right! By state law, parents and guardians working at companies with 25+ employees on-site are entitled to take up to 40 hours each school year to participate in the school activities of their child, not exceeding eight hours in any calendar month of the school year. When you look ahead at the school calendar, let your boss know about important assemblies and other events in advance.
  6. Get the facts. How is your school doing compared to other schools? The easiest way to find out is to request a copy of your school’s School Accountability Report Card (SARC) from the school or the district office or to view it online at http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/ac/sa/. The SARC has information on everything from school safety to demographics to teacher training and test scores.
  7. Run for your local school board. The idea might never have crossed your mind, but I urge you to think on it. School board members have diverse backgrounds, often drawing on experiences as parents, educators or former students in the district. A passion for education reform is truly the only requirement for the job – like most jobs, you can only learn by doing it.

The Write Stuff

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

It’s going to be hot this weekend, so why not plan to do a little boating on Echo Park Lake and help the future of our literary contributors of the world while you’re at it?

826la_regatta_winnersThe second annual 826LA Echo Park Lake Paddleboat Regatta takes place at 4 p.m. on Sunday, July 26. All you have to do is get yourself a four-person team and then raise a minimum of $100. You’ll get to participate in the festivities, which will include, of course, the colorful and fun-filled race as well as a goodie bag. Prizes include gift cards from Book Soup and other cool L.A. shops.

Deadline to register is tomorrow, but if you miss it you can still swing by and get to know the nonprofit organization and what it’s all about. It was founded by bestselling author Dave Eggers (A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius) in San Francisco. He brought it to L.A. in the form of the cool and quirky 826LA Time Travel Mart in Echo Park (with another creative center headquartered in Venice). They’ve expanded across a few other cities, too, with the idea of inspiring young writers across all socio-economic levels between the ages of 6 to 18 to tap into their inner authors, playwrights and poets. Teachers and tutors support young students with workshops ranging from writing nonsense poetry to producing a reality TV show.

So go check out the regatta – and it’ll be for the “write” reason.

Open, Sesame!

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Find out about snot, muscles, poop and healthy eating at the Sesame Street Presents: “The Body” exhibit, now occupying the child-friendly space across from the California Pizza Kitchen at Hollywood and Highland.

Jack and I took a Sunday afternoon trek over with L.A. Parent graphic designer Terresa Burgess and her energetic 1-1/2-year-old daughter Teagan.

The pair played in the obstacle course, learned about the journey of food through the intestines and got sprayed with “snot” from the giant nose at the mucous display. Teagan and Jack really liked Baby Bear’s Mini Mart and Mr. Hooper’s Store, where they practiced putting together their own well-balanced meals.

Teagan also liked the calm Elmo’s World room, where she found a comfy bean-bag chair to watch Elmo videos. Jack spent a significant amount of time at the Rub-A-Dub Tub, where Ernie and Rubber Ducky show why cleanliness is important (a good lesson for little boys!).

Elmo arrived in time for photos with both Jack and Teagan before we headed out for lunch. Kevin Clash, who portrays the voice of Elmo, was scheduled to appear, but both kids had tuckered themselves out on the exhibits. So we headed to the outdoor fountains, where the kids played and cooled off – discovering that being outside and playing is good for your body, too!

Sesame Street Presents: “The Body” is open 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. on weekends through April 26 (with additional spring break hours on April 8-9 and 15-16). Tickets cost $10 per child and include one adult admission (additional adult ticket is $5).

Photos by Terresa Burgess

Live From Air Force One

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

Today we zipped up to Simi Valley to check out the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum. We are about to step onto Air Force One.
What an awesome place and view.

Regardless of your politics, you can’t help but get drawn into this place with its history and great exhibits.

It is crowded on this holiday weekend but worth a bit of standing in lines. Especially to see the plane!

Golden White Board

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

Kate has a lot of homework this year. That means that the managing, planning, writing, scheduling, ciphering and cajoling that I do at the office doesn’t end when I walk in the front door at home.

There’s often a battle raging inside my head while I’m battling with Kate outside my head. Do I try to constantly keep reminding her to get this stuff done? Do I give up dinner making/laundry doing/clutter pick-upping/soccer-practice driving in order to sit down and help her through every minute of it? Do I let her “forget” or just decide that she’d rather do something else and suffer the consequences?

And while I’m sitting there watching her work on her times tables and sentence structure, I can’t help but think, “Hey, I already did this stuff. I paid my dues.” (Of course, I didn’t have that quantity of homework till I was in at least the ninth grade.) 

Of course, none of that type of thinking is productive. And for her part, Kate is really working hard at it. But through this turbulent first semester of third grade, I’ve managed to learn and discover some new techniques to help us both get through it with minimal glasses of wine (on my part) and fewer eyeball rolls and hands-to-the-sky gestures.

Tip Number One: Let the girl relax for a minute. Go kick the ball, dance to some horrible Jonas Brothers song, have a quick tennis match on the Wii. 

Tip Number Two: Feed her. She’s going to lap my diminutive stature in a matter of one good growth spurt, and she’s feeding that growing body like each meal is her last. A snack will keep her brain on her homophones instead of her hunger.

Tip Number Three: Give her a dry-erase board. This is quite possibly the best little brainstorm I’ve had since the “truth bed” (the end-of-day kid-confessional) and naming vegetables after icky monster parts. She sketches out her weekly plan, carefully erasing each day as she completes the tasks that she sets for herself based on the week’s due dates. The drawback is that Kate likes to linger in the creativity of the task (yesterday, she painstakingly made each letter a different color), but she got the work done. Which is kind of our goal here.

So there you go. And by all means, please leave comments with your suggestions for homework help!

For the Bookish

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Like so many other students out there, Kate, my third grader, is required as part of her homework to read at least 20 minutes per day. But tracking that time can be a real challenge for a young reader, who might get sucked into a book for an hour or only have time for a short literary break.

I can recommend this cool product to help: Mark-My-Time digital bookmark, which helps track reading time. Kate figured out how to set it pretty quickly and now keeps it stuffed into the pages of her current book or slides it into her backpack. No more hunting down a timer or watching the clock. And best of all, it’s quelled my nagging: “Did you read 20 minutes? I don’t think that was long enough!”

The bookmark can be set to count down or track cumulative time and is made from durable plastic. It comes in neon blue, green or purple and retails for $8.95 at various bookstores and at the Mark-My-Time Web site.